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Winter hair colors: salon and at home tips

Winter is the perfect time to refresh your hair color – when the cold, dry air looks our curls and the skin and feels blunt or bla. Fortunately, these trendy winter hair colors – from warm -blond to dark brown, almost black – overtook the vibration of the hair and at the same time restored the skin of the skin. Top colorists with the most common skin tones fit the top trends in the hair color here and show their tips on how to get a look at home or in the salon. Read on for a wonderful new one!

In what season do you want to refresh your hair color?

3 winter hair colors, the wow

Scroll on to see the breathtaking winter hair colors this season (and beyond) – Plus, you will find the one that is best suited for your skin tone.

For fair or light skin: try palomino blonde

Nicole KidmanKevin Winter/Getty

Inspired by the breathtaking horse breed of the same color, Palomino Blonde is a soft color with living golden, creamy pale ale and deep Topaz strips that look like tapes that come out of the inside, says Diana Milde, a colorist at Maxine Salon in Chicago. “This trendy color returns the depth, brightness and shimmer that lose blonde strands in the winter months.” The rich kaleidoscope of the shadow of warm, golden colors also gives the light skin a touch of charisma.

In the salon: Ask your colorist to put these colors in a “killed pattern around your head with a Balayage technique”, says Milde. This mixes all the tones seamlessly.

At home: Try to create a mixture of lowlights and highlights, Mike Peteltizzi suggests a celebrity colorist in the Chris Chase Salon in New York City. Start with the lowlights with a darker blonde dye, such as: L'Oréal Paris superior preference fade the shine of permanent hair color 8g golden blonde. Apply it to the roots and then to different ½ -inch sections in the head from the roots to the ends. Next, take a highlighting set like Clairol frost & tips highlighting kit. Apply the color to other different ¼ ”hair sections and leave the space between the lowlights. Let everything work for 30-40 minutes, rinsing and voilà-it blonde now has a winter light!

For medium or olivic skin: try praline brown

Brooke Shields with a beautiful brunettter hair color
Brooke ShieldsTaylor Hill/Getty

Rich, glowing golden tones, mixed with pearly browns, form this dreamy chocolate, which seems to be tailor -made for medium -sized skin. “The warm color mixture pulls out the golden tones in the complexion for a sun -drenched glow,” says Milde. It is even better that this variation of the tones gives hair more dimension, which creates the illusion of a more comprehensive hair head.

In the salon: Ask your colorists to use a dark brown base color with a hazelnach base with ultra-fine, light golden highlights that are strategically placed around the face. These soft, tonal highlights generate depth without a hard row of delimitation, so that the color can easily maintain with increasing hair.

At home: Find a box dye with descriptors such as honey, warm golden or medium brunette, such as: Age builder 5G medium gold brown permanent liqui cream hair color. “First turn to the roots need more time to process-if you still have 5 minutes in the processing time, pull the color to medium length and end,” says the Colomb of the celebrities, Jonathan Colombini . Use a Balayage kit for the highlights, such as: L'Oréal Paris preference balayage permanent hair color. Paint the color on different ¼ ”sections around the face and start 1 inches away from the roots. Check the hair after 30 minutes; Rinse after the hair has reached your desired sound. Brunette Bombshell Status reached!

For dark skin: try charcoal brown

Sheryl Lee Ralph with one of the winter hair colors
Sheryl Lee RalphMichael Rowe/Getty

Beautiful charcoal Brown has a moment and that for good reason. This cool-sound color is a mixture of ash brown touch of black that holds the color that looks rich without not distorting. “The light-reflecting color flatters everyone with a deeper complexion because it comes wonderfully against the skin,” says Lauren Milde, Colorist in the Maxine Salon in Chicago. Avoid only blue-black or brown with deep red pigments because they can be overwhelming. “These colors pull unwanted red and yellow tones that make the skin appear washed out,” adds Colombini.

In the salon: Ask your colorist for a cool, dark brown all-over. To bring the color to the next stage, end a clear glossy treatment for additional shine.

At home: Choose a cool, deep brown dye that is one or two colors darker than your skin to ensure that there is a certain contrast. Attempt: Schwarzkopf keratin color permanent hair color cream in 4.1. After processing the color, use a clear gloss in Shewery, such as: Dphue Glassy Flaze in Saleto reinforce the shine. Tip: Lay the glaze again every other week so that strands look glossy and glamorous.